The film opens with Lagos glittering under a soft golden hue that city where love stories burn fast and die slow. We meet Uche (played by Dakore Egbuson-Akande) and Toyin (Nse Ikpe-Etim), two women who’ve been best friends since university, bound by laughter, heartbreak, and a mutual understanding that nothing could ever come between them. But everything changes the day they both meet the same man the charming but complicated Sunday (Oris Erhuero).
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Uche, a successful art gallery owner, finds in Sunday a kindred soul, someone who appreciates her confidence and maturity. Their romance blossoms quietly, full of long phone calls, intimate glances, and stolen weekends. But the twist comes when she discovers Toyin is also falling deeply for the same man. Toyin, recently recovering from heartbreak, sees Sunday as her second chance at happiness. Neither woman knows of the other’s affair at first, until one fateful evening when secrets spill out like broken glass.
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The film’s emotional heart beats through the confrontation scene being raw, painful, and beautifully acted. Toyin and Uche’s friendship shatters under the weight of betrayal, and even Sunday, caught between both women, finds himself drowning in guilt and indecision. As illness and tragedy enter the story, the tone deepens.
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Uche battles cancer, and suddenly, all the petty jealousies fade into the background as both women are forced to face what truly matters being love, forgiveness, and time.
By the film’s end, the audience is left not with a fairytale, but a sobering truth about how fragile love can be when friendship stands in its way. It’s slow, stylish, emotional, and haunting in its quiet moments the kind of Nollywood story that lingers.
Director: Walter Taylaur
Cast: Dakore Egbuson-Akande, Nse Ikpe-Etim, Oris Erhuero, Alexx Ekubo
Runtime: 1h 56m
Watch trailer here
